r~ir i4gr :4341v 1 FICKLE High-75 Low--63 vh. liv N^ 1in " - - - _ . - _ Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sundav. Seotember 17. 1978 Ten Cents ... ' .. ------Twve Pages Michigan bumbling rolls past Illini, By HENRY ENGELHARDT Who's next? Notre Dame by name-the long-awaited trip to Leprechaun City-that's who's next for the Wolverines. After putting Illinois 'away 31-0 yesterday in a game highlighted by the threat of excitement, Michigan will pit a 1-0 record against the Irish on y knational television next Saturday. Q DESPITE the impressive numbers p;that lingered on the Michigan Stadium scoreboards at the game's end, the Wolverines were far from awesome-the opposition was weak. The Illini, now 0-1-1, have scored only seven points in their last five games, dating back to last season. They have yet to score in eight quarters this " sf %a'season. " The Michigan defense held Illinois to 177 yards and speared two turnovers, both of which resulted in Michigan scores. 104,123 fans saw quarterback Rick Leach lead the offense, mainly with fine runs and well-timed pitchouts. Leach's AAA f. passing, (six for 13, 75 yards) as the senior admitted, could have been bet- ter. Day Photo byMAUREENO'MALLEY Coadh Bo Schembechler was relaxed MICHIGAN QUARTERBACK RickLeach deftly eludes an Illinois rusher while and relatively pleased after beating a sCHIGN URT ERBACK Reic Lweacdeftly.elueteam coached by his former aide Gary searching out an open receiver downfield. Moeller. Relatively, considering it was Nicaraguan troops claim gains; U.S. considers more economic sanetions the season opener. "Coaches are just like everyone else," he said. "In the fir- st game you aren't worth a damn. That first half I guarantee I wasn't worth a damn." Over 14 minutes had elapsed in the first quarter before. Michigan got its initial first down. In the same period Illinois had five first downs. HOWEVER, Schembechler and his troops got their act together and rever- sed those statistics the rest of the way. "We started slow," said assistant coach Bill McCartney. "They beat us off the ball. We were tight. But we didn't make any changes-we stayed/ with our game plan." The winning points, three from the foot of kicker Gregg Willner, culminated an 11-play, 28-yard drive. It started late in the first quarter when in- side linebacker Mel Owens intercepted a pass thrown by Illini sophomore quar- terback Rich Weiss and moved it to the Wolverine 43. LEACH guided the offense to the Illinois 10, but on third and seven most of the Illini defense waded in on him as he attempted to pass. Leach slipped to the turf after a 19-yard retreat, which Willner followed with the field goal from 46 yards out. 31-0 "I was disappointed in my offensive line," said Schembechler. "We've gol to block better than we did. Leach wag forced to throw under duress." Late in the first half the offense again got the ball in good field position. Mike Harden returned an Illinois punt 21 yards, setting Leach and Co. up on their own 49. It took six plays for Michigan to score its first touchdown of the season. In the drive Leach hit two passes, the key one a dangerous 18-yard lob over the middle to Huckleby after Leach had avoided the Illini line. See LEACH, Page 12 By AP and UPI OUTSIDE LEON, Nicaragua - Government troops claimed the recapture of Nicaragua's second largest city Saturday in their town-by- town bid to crush civil war. But witnesses said National Guardsmen were using women and children as shieldseagainst stubborn rebel resistance. At least three other cities were still largely in guerrilla hands and new fighting was reported in a fourth. U.S. SOURCES said a total 1,500 Americans and dependents were trapped in the embattled cities. One Interview with rebels, page 2 American has been killed and two wounded in the offensive launched a week ago by Marxist Sandinista guerrillas to bring down the regime of President Anastasio Somoza Debayle. Meanwhile, an American source said Washington was considering further pressure on President Anastasio Somoza to force him to accept outside mediation to halt the bloodshed. Church groups in this predominatly Roman Catholic nation made public Saturday an open letter to President Carter asking him to halt all aid to the Somoza government to force the president's resignation. THE AMERICAN informant in Managua, who asked not to be identified, said, "The opposition has indicated it would accept outside mediation but the government appears to be stalling for time. Apparently it feels it can control the insurrection militarily if it has time to do so. "The United States will pursue its efforts to mediation," the source said. He would not say what type of pressure might be brought to bear on Somoza. The State Department last week called on all sides in the Nicaraguan conflict to accept mediation and a cease-fire. U.S Ambassador Mauricio Solaun met with Somoza Friday and Saturday to express U.S. concern about the situation in Nicaragua, the source said. THE CARTER administration already is withholding about $5.3 million in military sales credits approved by Congress for Somoza, but released $12 million in non-military aid last May. Washington feels the non-military aid will benefit Nicaragua's needy and will not directly prop up the Somoza regime. Somoza's critics claim he and his allies benefit illegally from every dollar in aid that enters the country. A senior executive of Nicaragua's National Development Institute said opposition groups have agreed to ask for three or four foreigners to be sent to Nicaragua to mediate a truce. The institute is a private organization of about 700 of Nicaragua's top businessmen. THE EXECUTIVE, who declined to be named, did not say which countries might be asked to supply mediators. He said businessmen representing his organization, the chambers of commerce and the construction industry would meet Sunday to decide whether to continue a nationwide general strike. Earlier, opposition groups in Managua issued a statement saying they were ready to negotiate a settlement, but emphasized it must be made by Nicaraguans and not, be imposed by outsiders. The national strike was called by the "broad opposition front" 23 days ago to demand Somoza's resignation. It followed a bold attack Aug. 22 by Sandinista guerrillas on the national Daily Photo by WAYNE CAB CO-CAPTAINS JERRY METER (46) and Russell Davis (33) lead the Wolverinew into the 1978 season with the traditional rut under the M Club banner. REVOLT NOW CENTERED IN MICHIGAN: oters to speak out on taxes -Sun day, * See the full details of the game on the sports page. * A farewell to the University's nin- th president on the editorial page. " A -review of Owen mcBride's per- formance at the Ark on the Arts page. Irr . For happenings, weather and local briefs, see TODAY, page 3. By KEITH RICHBURG Daily News Analysis Ten years ago Alabama Gov. George Wallace, running for President, told voters to "send them a message." But it wasn't until last June., in the politically undefineable state of California, that a disgruntled electorate did just that by telling politicians just what it wants. Defying the political wisdom of economists, labor leaders, and the popular "small is beautiful" philosophy of Gov. Edmund Brown, Californians voted 2-to-1 in favor of a proposal to slash their inflated property taxes, making the "tax revolt" the rallying cry of the modern-day middle class. NOW MICHIGAN has become the new barometer of middle class discontent, with two proposition 13-type tax limitation proposals on the November ballot. And, as in California, most conventional sources of wisdom are warning voters that passage of either tax plan will lead to government' job layoffs, school closings, and massive cuts in already austere social services programs. And, as with California, recent polls show that voters plan to ignore the experts' pleas, and approve both proposals. One plan is the Tisch amendment, advanced by Shiawassee County Drain Commissioner Robert Tisch, which is patterned closely after California's proposition 13. That plan. would cut property tax from its present 50 per cent of the assessed market value to 25 per cent. It also allows the lost revenue to be made up through a one per cent state income tax hike. THE OTHER proposal is the brainchild of insurance company executive Richard Headlee, and would limit increases in state spending to the increase in the income levels of Michigan citizens. In addition, the Headlee plan would require voter approval for all local bond sales. Both Gov. Milliken and his democratic opponent, State Sen. Wil- liam Fitzgerald, are adamant foes of the Tisch amendment. But both candi- dates sense the public's anti-tax mood, and have responded by supporting Headlee. One does not oppose popular bills during an election year. year. Politicians are scrambling to appease voters by supporting Headlee, but even that may not sate the public's hunger for lower taxes. IF TISCH does pass - recent polls indicate it will - the governor, whoever that will be, will have to implement it effectively, and manage the state budget within the limits prescribed by the voters. -Again paralleling California, where popular Gov. Brown was unable to use his own personal appeal to dissuade voters supporting a massive tax cut, Michigan's two-term Republican Governor Milliken, who staunchly op- poses Tisch, has apparently had little effect on the voters. "We cannot fall into the trap of pandering to extreme radical sentiments in the guise of fiscal conservatism," Milliken said in July. "We cannot use tax limitation as the current euphemism for anti-black, anti- Spanish speaking and anti-poor sentiments of some segments of the population." But his warnings are not being heeded. The political dilemma for the governor is that if the Tisch plan he attacked so vehemently is favored as strongly as polls show, he may be risking his support outs~ate, where both tax plans are the most popular. The outstate vote, which is See POLITICIANS, Page 2 Fleming: The end of an era By RENE BECKER and KEN PARSIGIAN Last in a series Since 1975 there have been three issue that have stirred the students to On January 19, 1975, The Daily learned that the Regents had unanimously chosen Jewell Cobb, a black woman and dean of Connecticut Cnllege-tn renlace Rhnde no tenure offer was "not unusual," the record shows that at least the five LSA deans who immediately preceeded the was the reason Cobb had such an "insulting" offer. In fact, Fleming been given apparent contradiction of the statement Rhodes had made about the no-tenure had first offer not being unusual. FLEMING DEFENDED his actions. In resnonse to a renort by the situation, with the college under severe and continuous financial pressure,' it was desirable to have the most experienced person in the position." One vear later- in iFhrnarv 19?7B_ Ral,. s -- - AI --- I